Birds in the Ancient World

Birds in the Ancient World

Author: Jeremy Mynott

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 476

ISBN-13: 0198713657

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Birds played an important role in the ancient world: as indicators of time, weather, and seasons; as a resource for hunting, medicine, and farming; as pets and entertainment; as omens and messengers of the gods. Jeremy Mynott explores the similarities and surprising differences between ancient perceptions of the natural world and our own.


Birds in the Ancient World from A to Z

Birds in the Ancient World from A to Z

Author: W. Geoffrey Arnott

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2007-09-12

Total Pages: 304

ISBN-13: 1134556268

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Birds in the Ancient World from A to Z gathers together the ancient information available, listing all the names that ancient Greeks gave their birds and all their descriptions and analyses. W. Geoffrey Arnott identifies as many of them as possible in the light of modern ornithological studies. The ancient Greek bird names are transliterated into English script, and all that the ancients said about birds is presented in English. This book is accordingly the first complete discussion of ancient bird names that will be accessible to readers without ancient Greek. The only large-scale examination of ancient birds for seventy years, the book has an exhaustive bibliography (partly classical scholarship and partly ornithological) to encourage further study, and provides students and ornithologists with the definitive study of ancient birds.


Ancient Greek Lists

Ancient Greek Lists

Author: Athena Kirk

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2023-03-30

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781108744959

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ancient Greek Lists brings together catalogic texts from a variety of genres, arguing that the list form was the ancient mode of expressing value through text. Ranging from Homer's Catalogue of Ships through Attic comedy and Hellenistic poetry to temple inventories, the book draws connections among texts seldom juxtaposed, examining the ways in which lists can stand in for objects, create value, act as methods of control, and even approximate the infinite. Athena Kirk analyzes how lists come to stand as a genre in their own right, shedding light on both under-studied and well-known sources to engage scholars and students of Classical literature, ancient history, and ancient languages.